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Don Edwards Sets State Record
Wrestler Wins
Championship GRE~~\ Rl\· f~Rf;URR~~~T
I • I ' I I . ' ' ' I . : . • ' I ' ; I ' : I I
Sophomore Don Edwards, a credit hours while the NCAA
graduate of Auburn High School, rules state that an athlete must w..-~xams s finished in first place In t.be 167 maintain a 2.0grade pointa,-erage
pound class in the State Wrestling to compete.
Meet last weekend.
Quarterly Due
The Green River Winter Quar·
terly is due to come out during
tbe first week or the spring quar­ter
session.
Such a victory Is not new to Ed·
wards for, as a high school student,
he went to the State Meet twice,
finishing fifih as a junior and
nrst as a senior.
In the Big Bend gymnasium Sat·
urday Don won his title in a tight·
ly contested match against Ray
Wallaeo; of Olympia Community
College, 2-0. Prior to reaching tbe
finals, Don pinned two other men.
Against the first. he established
a new St.ate Record with a time of
20 seconds for a pin. His next
opponent was pinned in 2 min·
utes 2 sec.
Green River athletes have been
ruled ineligible for NCAA ebaJn.
plonsbip competition which Don
would attend because of his Slate
Championship victory.
The reason for the Ineligibility
Is that the college rules state that
an athlete must be pnssing 10
G.R. Delegates to Attend
Mock State Convention
Green River College will be said. "the convenuon bas two
represented among the 10 uni· purposes: Educational and politi·
versities and colleges Invited to cal."
attend the Seattle University In- On education, Taylor hopes
vitational Mock Stale Constitu· eaeb delegate will become rami·
tlonal Convention to be held to- liar with the general problem of
day through Sunday on the S.U. state constitutional revision and
t:ampus. or modern state government prob-
The VIP batting order is: Gov. lem•.
ern or Daniel J. Evans. Secretary "On polities,'' he said. ••the con·
of State A. Ludlow Kra-. State.-" lt.elf will aet-as m mt .
crial.Oi"Martan J. Durkin , Chief est group in the promotion of
Justice Robert C. Finley, and state constitutional revision and
State Attorney Genernl John J. will ask the legislature either for
O'Connell. amendments or for convening
All five will be principal speak· of a state constitutional conven·
ers at the tbrec-<lay gathering lion."
called bytbe Associated Students
of Seattle Uni\'Crslty's Political
Union to study tbe present Wash·
lngton State constitution and to
make recommendations for its
reform to the State Legislature.
"Recognizing that the state
consitution of 1889 has major
areas no longer applicable in
1967, .. SU political union presi·
dent Charles W. (Chuck) Taylor
College
Invites
Teachers
High School English teachers
!'rom 11 area school districts have
been invited to visit Green River
College Tuesday, Murch 7.
Miss Geraldine Mertz, program
chairman, said the Informal gel·
together will begJO at 3 30 with a
half hour coffee sess1on where
the teachers will meet wnh mem­bers
of college English starr.
Film To Be Shown
At 4 p.m. a film produced by
the Commission on English, "In·
venlion and Topics: or Where to
Find Something to Write About."
will be shown. Following the film,
Or. Eugene Smitb of the Univer­sity
of Washington EnaJish de­partment
will lead the group in
the discussion or the film.
Students
To Build
Telescopes
Would you like to see the rings
or Saturn or the moons or Jupiter
... with your own telescope?
Natural Science 90. a class to
be taught next quarter on Tues·
days and Thursdays, will be een·
tered around tbe building or a
telescope. according to Dr. Ed
Fohn and Phil Manson, tnstruc·
tors for the three-credit class
Students will buy a kit and, dur·
ing lab sessions. will build their
own telescopes. The lectures will
be centered around the physical
and chemical aspects or the pro­ject
a:ueh as the ophcs. CO·Cffi·
cient of expansion or the alas.s.
abras•ves. chemical structure or
tbe slass and the grinding proees·
ses involved, and the sih:erma
process of the mirrors. The ICC·
lures will also touch on astronomy
and the uses or the instrument.
The students will buy kits for
either nine dollars or 13 dollnrs.
depending on whether they buy
a four ineh mirror or a six·inch
mirror. The completed telescope
wlU be valued rrom$4010$50.
Visit Set
Winter quarter final examinations
I M•In:n 20, 21, 22, 1967.
20
AIIIO a.m. classes
Alii p.m. classes
will be given
8-10 a.m.
10.12 noon
J.J p.m. Classes that have schedule conniets
includingTTh classes
The new Qunrterly will sport a
blue cover which highlights night
skiing. The ski ers pictured on the
cover will be members or the
Green River Sid Club.
\l~a1reh 21 Various educational depart·
8-10 a.m. AilS am. classes ment.s on t:ampus sueh as Trades
10.12 noon Allll a.m. classes and lndustr~ea and t..he Se:ient:e
1·3 p.m. All2 p.m. classes and Humanities will be empha·
\~'larc:h 22 - sized in the Quarterly.
8-10 a.m. All9 a.m. classes Also, the Quarterly will recap
10·12noon All12 noon c lasses various student ocUvities includ·
1·3 p.m. All3 p.m. classes lng basketball gnmcs, the wrestling
,.,.,._.,~.,."""~'""'-'.-.,~!11111...,-'"'!1",."""..,..,.,-'.-.,~.,."""• and swimming teams, Renaissance
week, and the Prom at the Edge­water.
College Provides Draft Training
The Green River Com"'unity
College again hns scholarships
to provide training for persons
interested In careers as dran.s.
men. The eight-week mechanical
drafiing program will ~gin on
Man:h6.
orthographic projection. descrip·
tivc geometry, development or
sheet metal nat patterns. layout
techniques. and creation and
maintenance of production en·
gmeering drawings.
All supplies and tools needed
for the course are prov1ded by
the school. Jobs with starting
salaries over $2.50 per hour arc
available to successfUl graduates.
Applicants should contact the
Washington State Employment
Securily omee In Auburn or Ta·
coma, or Green River Community
To qualify applicants must be College.
U. S. eititens. at least 18 years
old by the end oft he class, have a
high school diploma or G.E.D. Professor To Speak equ ivalent, and have a good per·
sonal record. They must also pass Donovan F. Sanderson. pro'es· • ST • th s · Le t
d n. , noon 10 -~ • . e ctenee c ure 3 ra mg aptitude test. sor or mathemau·cs at Western A h h A good matb background is room. ny ot crs w o want to
helpful but not mandatory. Washington Stale College will attend are invited. according to
Students recetvc instruction talk to Green River Colle'" stu· Pbil Hefi of the Green River Col
I fd n I ru d dents Tuesday. lege math departmcnL
n tbe use o ra ing too s. n a- Prof. Sande~;ot£- wilL ll.lk lA.. .l!rol..Sandei'Mft will talk -
meniAls of line work ~!!!!tr..l!!&. n: iiiiO Folk Sin9ii.9'U"TffO~N-....... .
To Perform Tuesday
The Travelers 3, • folk singing
trio that has appeared on several
network TV programs and is cur·
rently touring colleges through·
out the United States, will per­form
at Green Rtver College Tues-.
dayal2 p.m.
Charles Oyama. Pete Apo, Joe
Lemmano, and Mike Botts, guitar
strumming vocallst.s who spice
their act with comedy as well as
song, have appeared on "Hoot·
enany," the "Mike Douclas Show,"
" Hullabaloo," AI lllrt's "Fan·
fare.'' ''Let's Sing Out.'' and the
•·Roy Rogers Show."
They'll be singtng folk songs
h ke "John Henry," "The Saints
Go ~!arching In," "Ten Thousand
Years:• and .. Cotta Travel On.''
Hawaiian Descent
Two or the Travelers' 3 are
Hawaiians, a foct they use to its
fuJiest in creating humorous
dialogue to breuk up the vocal
and instrumental numbers.
Guitarist Pel~ Apo. Hawaiian
born. has attended !lChool at tbe
University of Oregon and hopes
to become a wrller·comPOser. He
is married and has four children.
Drummer Mike Bolls is des·
cribed by his press agent as a
"Space Age" drummer who spe­cializes
in jazz. Ue does most or
the groups arranging and collabo­rates
with Pete on original com·
positions. He attended school at
Sacramento City College.
~lath ~i~or Plays Bass
The "Bearded Prophet." bassist
Joe Lemmano. wos a math major
at Sacramento City College when
The Travelers 3 call themselves
a "folk-rock" group.
The group was formed In 1959
at the University or Oregon Dntrr>
mer Mike Botts was added in
1964 and Joe Lemmano tn 1965
replaced original bassist Dick
Shirley.
Since their start they have ap-peared
In more than 40 colleges
and universities; clubs such as
the Blue Angel In New York, Har·
rah's in Lake Taho. Dunes Hotel
in La~ Vegas. Copacabana 10
Honolulu. Town and Country and
Olympic Hotel In Seattle, the
Ca\·e in Vancouver, and Playboy
in Los Angeles; and on numerous
high school assemblies.
Last year Green River English
instructors met several times
with members or high school fa·
culties, acquainting them with
the Green River prog·ram.
Belter Correlotlon
•"This is a contJnuant:e of the
same sort of program," Miss Meru
Indicated. "We reel through meet·
ings of this kind we can better de­velop
an effective correlation be­tween
the high schools and our
school."
Mcchonleal engineering and he joined the group. He is the
machine technology students will group's road monoger.
vlsll Pugel Die-Cast 10 Tacoma Charles Oyama. the other Ha­Tbursday
morning. Instructors waiian, plays 12.-strlng guitar in
Roy Watson and Dick Norman the group, and iJ the rour-mem·
will accompany the 25 students. ber trio's leading wiL He is the
They will observe the making or business man for the group. He
dies and the operation or dJe. has a master's degree in psyehol·
casting machines. ogy from the Univer•ity of Oregon. TilE TRAVELERS 3

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Full Text

Don Edwards Sets State Record
Wrestler Wins
Championship GRE~~\ Rl\· f~Rf;URR~~~T
I • I ' I I . ' ' ' I . : . • ' I ' ; I ' : I I
Sophomore Don Edwards, a credit hours while the NCAA
graduate of Auburn High School, rules state that an athlete must w..-~xams s finished in first place In t.be 167 maintain a 2.0grade pointa,-erage
pound class in the State Wrestling to compete.
Meet last weekend.
Quarterly Due
The Green River Winter Quar·
terly is due to come out during
tbe first week or the spring quar­ter
session.
Such a victory Is not new to Ed·
wards for, as a high school student,
he went to the State Meet twice,
finishing fifih as a junior and
nrst as a senior.
In the Big Bend gymnasium Sat·
urday Don won his title in a tight·
ly contested match against Ray
Wallaeo; of Olympia Community
College, 2-0. Prior to reaching tbe
finals, Don pinned two other men.
Against the first. he established
a new St.ate Record with a time of
20 seconds for a pin. His next
opponent was pinned in 2 min·
utes 2 sec.
Green River athletes have been
ruled ineligible for NCAA ebaJn.
plonsbip competition which Don
would attend because of his Slate
Championship victory.
The reason for the Ineligibility
Is that the college rules state that
an athlete must be pnssing 10
G.R. Delegates to Attend
Mock State Convention
Green River College will be said. "the convenuon bas two
represented among the 10 uni· purposes: Educational and politi·
versities and colleges Invited to cal."
attend the Seattle University In- On education, Taylor hopes
vitational Mock Stale Constitu· eaeb delegate will become rami·
tlonal Convention to be held to- liar with the general problem of
day through Sunday on the S.U. state constitutional revision and
t:ampus. or modern state government prob-
The VIP batting order is: Gov. lem•.
ern or Daniel J. Evans. Secretary "On polities,'' he said. ••the con·
of State A. Ludlow Kra-. State.-" lt.elf will aet-as m mt .
crial.Oi"Martan J. Durkin , Chief est group in the promotion of
Justice Robert C. Finley, and state constitutional revision and
State Attorney Genernl John J. will ask the legislature either for
O'Connell. amendments or for convening
All five will be principal speak· of a state constitutional conven·
ers at the tbrec-
mer Mike Botts was added in
1964 and Joe Lemmano tn 1965
replaced original bassist Dick
Shirley.
Since their start they have ap-peared
In more than 40 colleges
and universities; clubs such as
the Blue Angel In New York, Har·
rah's in Lake Taho. Dunes Hotel
in La~ Vegas. Copacabana 10
Honolulu. Town and Country and
Olympic Hotel In Seattle, the
Ca\·e in Vancouver, and Playboy
in Los Angeles; and on numerous
high school assemblies.
Last year Green River English
instructors met several times
with members or high school fa·
culties, acquainting them with
the Green River prog·ram.
Belter Correlotlon
•"This is a contJnuant:e of the
same sort of program," Miss Meru
Indicated. "We reel through meet·
ings of this kind we can better de­velop
an effective correlation be­tween
the high schools and our
school."
Mcchonleal engineering and he joined the group. He is the
machine technology students will group's road monoger.
vlsll Pugel Die-Cast 10 Tacoma Charles Oyama. the other Ha­Tbursday
morning. Instructors waiian, plays 12.-strlng guitar in
Roy Watson and Dick Norman the group, and iJ the rour-mem·
will accompany the 25 students. ber trio's leading wiL He is the
They will observe the making or business man for the group. He
dies and the operation or dJe. has a master's degree in psyehol·
casting machines. ogy from the Univer•ity of Oregon. TilE TRAVELERS 3